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Chapter Money Growth and Inflation 17. Inflation – Increase in the overall level of prices Deflation – Decrease in the overall level of prices Hyperinflation.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter Money Growth and Inflation 17. Inflation – Increase in the overall level of prices Deflation – Decrease in the overall level of prices Hyperinflation."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter Money Growth and Inflation 17

2 Inflation – Increase in the overall level of prices Deflation – Decrease in the overall level of prices Hyperinflation – Extraordinarily high rate of inflation 2

3 The Classical Theory of Inflation The level of prices and the value of money Inflation – Economy-wide phenomenon Concerns the value of economy’s medium of exchange Inflation - rise in the price level – Lower value of money – Each dollar - buys a smaller quantity of goods and services 3

4 The Classical Theory of Inflation Money demand – Reflects how much wealth people want to hold in liquid form – Depends on Credit cards; ATM machines; Interest rate Average level of prices in economy – Demand curve – downward sloping 4

5 The Classical Theory of Inflation Money supply – Determined by the Fed and banking system – Supply curve - vertical Monetary equilibrium In the long run – Overall level of prices adjusts to: Demand for money equals the supply 5

6 Figure How the supply and demand for money determine the equilibrium price level 1 6 Quantity of Money 0 (high) (low) Value of Money, 1/P 1 ¾ ½ ¼ Price Level, P 1 1.33 2 4 (high) (low) Money Demand Quantity fixed by the Fed Money Supply A Equilibrium value of money Equilibrium price level The horizontal axis shows the quantity of money. The left vertical axis shows the value of money, and the right vertical axis shows the price level. The supply curve for money is vertical because the quantity of money supplied is fixed by the Fed. The demand curve for money is downward sloping because people want to hold a larger quantity of money when each dollar buys less. At the equilibrium, point A, the value of money (on the left axis) and the price level (on the right axis) have adjusted to bring the quantity of money supplied and the quantity of money demanded into balance.

7 The Classical Theory of Inflation The effects of a monetary injection Economy – in equilibrium – The Fed doubles the supply of money Prints bills; Drops them on market – Or: The Fed – open-market purchase – New equilibrium Supply curve shifts right Value of money decreases Price level increases 7

8 Figure An increase in the money supply 2 8 Quantity of Money 0 (high) (low) Value of Money, 1/P 1 ¾ ½ ¼ Price Level, P 1 1.33 2 4 (high) (low) Money Demand M1M1 MS 1 A When the Fed increases the supply of money, the money supply curve shifts from MS 1 to MS 2. The value of money (on the left axis) and the price level (on the right axis) adjust to bring supply and demand back into balance. The equilibrium moves from point A to point B. Thus, when an increase in the money supply makes dollars more plentiful, the price level increases, making each dollar less valuable. M2M2 MS 2 B 1. An increase in the money supply... 2.... decreases the value of money... 3.... and increases the price level.

9 The Classical Theory of Inflation Quantity theory of money – Quantity of money available: Determines the price level – Growth rate in quantity of money available: Determines the inflation rate 9

10 The Classical Theory of Inflation A brief look at the adjustment process Monetary injection – Excess supply of money – Increase in demand of goods and services – Price of goods and services increases – Increase in price level – Increase in quantity of money demanded – New equilibrium 10

11 The Classical Theory of Inflation The classical dichotomy & monetary neutrality Nominal variables Variables measured in monetary units Real variables Variables measured in physical units Classical dichotomy Theoretical separation of nominal & real variables Monetary neutrality Changes in money supply don’t affect real variables 11

12 The Classical Theory of Inflation Velocity and the quantity equation Velocity of money (V) – Rate at which money changes hands V = (P × Y) / M – P = price level (GDP deflator) – Y = real GDP – M = quantity of money 12

13 The Classical Theory of Inflation Velocity and the quantity equation Quantity equation: M × V = P × Y Quantity of money (M) Velocity of money (V) Dollar value of the economy’s output of goods and services (P × Y ) – Shows: an increase in quantity of money Must be reflected in: – Price level must rise – Quantity of output must rise – Velocity of money must fall 13

14 Figure Nominal GDP, quantity of money, & velocity of money 3 14 This figure shows the nominal value of output as measured by nominal GDP, the quantity of money as measured by M2, and the velocity of money as measured by their ratio. For comparability, all three series have been scaled to equal 100 in 1960. Notice that nominal GDP and the quantity of money have grown dramatically over this period, while velocity has been relatively stable.

15 The Classical Theory of Inflation Five steps - essence of quantity theory of money 1.Velocity of money Relatively stable over time 2.Changes in quantity of money (M) Proportionate changes in nominal value of output (P × Y) 15

16 The Classical Theory of Inflation Five steps - quantity theory of money 3.Economy’s output of goods and services (Y) Primarily determined by factor supplies And available production technology Because money is neutral – Money does not affect output 16

17 The Classical Theory of Inflation Five steps - quantity theory of money 4.Change in money supply (M) Induces proportional changes in the nominal value of output (P × Y) – Reflected in changes in the price level (P) 5.Central bank - increases the money supply rapidly High rate of inflation. 17

18 The Classical Theory of Inflation The inflation tax – Revenue the government raises by creating (printing) money – Tax on everyone who holds money The Fisher effect – Principle of monetary neutrality An increase in the rate of money growth Raises the rate of inflation But does not affect any real variable 18

19 The Classical Theory of Inflation The Fisher effect – Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate – Inflation rate – Nominal interest rate = Real interest rate + Inflation rate Fisher effect: one-for-one adjustment of nominal interest rate to inflation rate When the Fed increases the rate of money growth Long-run result – Higher inflation rate – Higher nominal interest rate 19

20 Figure The nominal interest rate and the inflation rate 5 20 This figure uses annual data since 1960 to show the nominal interest rate on 3- month Treasury bills and the inflation rate as measured by the consumer price index. The close association between these two variables is evidence for the Fisher effect: When the inflation rate rises, so does the nominal interest rate

21 The Costs of Inflation A fall in purchasing power? Inflation fallacy “Inflation robs people of the purchasing power of his hard-earned dollars” When prices rise – Buyers – pay more – Sellers – get more – Inflation in incomes - goes hand in hand with inflation in prices Inflation does not in itself reduce people’s real purchasing power 21

22 The Costs of Inflation Shoeleather costs – Resources wasted when inflation encourages people to reduce their money holdings – Can be substantial Menu costs – Costs of changing prices – Inflation – increases menu costs that firms must bear 22

23 The Costs of Inflation Relative-price variability & misallocation of resources Market economies Rely on relative prices to allocate scarce resources – Consumers - compare – Quality and prices of various goods and services – Determine allocation of scarce factors of production Inflation - distorts relative prices Consumer decisions – distorted Markets - less able to allocate resources to their best use 23

24 The Costs of Inflation Inflation-induced tax distortions Taxes – distort incentives – Many taxes More problematic in the presence of inflation Tax treatment of capital gains – Capital gains – Profits: Sell an asset for more than its purchase price – Inflation discourages saving Exaggerates the size of capital gains Increases the tax burden 24

25 The Costs of Inflation Inflation-induced tax distortions Tax treatment of interest income – Nominal interest earned on savings Treated as income Even though part of the nominal interest rate compensates for inflation Higher inflation – Tends to discourage people from saving 25

26 The Costs of Inflation Confusion and inconvenience Money – Yardstick with which we measure economic transactions The Fed’s job – Ensure the reliability of money When the Fed increases the money supply – Creates inflation – Erodes the real value of the unit of account 26

27 The Costs of Inflation A special cost of unexpected inflation: arbitrary redistributions of wealth Unexpected inflation – Redistributes wealth among the population Not by merit Not by need – Redistribute wealth among debtors and creditors Inflation - volatile & uncertain – When the average rate of inflation is high 27


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